State of Nevada
Department of Health and Human Services
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS AND GRANTS
Federally Qualified Hea lth Center Incubator Project
REQUEST FOR APPLICATIONS
STATE FISCAL YEARS 2020-2021
NOTE This document is available online at
httpdhhsnvgovgrants
Table of Contents PROJECT SUMMARY SECTION I3
11 BACKGROUND 3
12 PROJECT REQUIREMENTS5
APPLICATION PROCESS SECTION II 11
21 APPLICATION QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS 11
22 EVALUATION AND AWARD PROCESS 11
23 NOTIFCATION AND AWARD PROCESS 12
24 DISCLAIMER 13
25 RFA TIMELINE 14
26 UPON APPROVAL OF AWARD 15
APPLICATION SECTION III16
31 APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS 16
32 APPLICATION 17
APPLICATION CHECKLIST26
APPENDIX A SCORING MATRIX 27
APPENDIX B OCPG - GRANT PROCEDURES COMPLAINTS FROM APPLICANTS NOT SELECTED28
APPENDIX C SCOPE OF WORK29
APPENDIX D CERTIFICATION BY AUTHORIZED OFFICIAL 30
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 2 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
PROJECT SUMMARY SECTION I
This Requ est for Applications (RFA) is intended to solicit competitive proposals from Federally Qualified
Health Cent ers (FQHCs) and FQHC Look-Alikes for State Fiscal Years (SFY) 2020 and 2021 This RFA is
published and administered by the Office of Community Partnerships and Grants (OCPG) in the Directorrsquos Office of the Nevada Department of Health and Human Servic es (DHHS-DO)
Awarded projects will provide health ca re services to school-aged children youth and their fa milies in or
in collaboration with a school-related setting For the purpose of this RFA a school-related setting means
any of the following school-based scho ol-linked mobile clinic or telehealth service
11 BACKGROUND
Nevada has made significant advances in reducing the rate of medically uninsured children however
there are reasons to believe that many children in the state still have difficulties in accessing health care
For starters Nevada ranks 47th in the country for percentage of children without health insurance and
48th regarding the ratio of health care providers to population1
Moreover Nevada ranks 51st for the percentage of children with a medical home The American Academy
of Pediatrics specifies seven qualities essential to medical home care accessible family-centered
continuous comprehensive coordinated compassionate and culturally effective care2
Young children typically visit their primary physician many times each year to receive vaccinations and
well-child check-ups However once these children begin elementary school they often only see a doctor
when they are sick many times this doctor is in an urgent care setting This infrequent contact with an
established doctor can result in medical problems being undiagnosed or delayed in treatment Mental
and behavioral health conditions may be also be overlooked without regular visits with a doctor
Untreated medical issues not only effects how a child feels and behaves but they can also have a ripple
effect on a childrsquos academic success For example being unable to see the classroom board due to vision
issues or not being able to understand the teacher as a result of hearing loss makes educational
achievement very difficult Whether a child is living in pain struggling with a learning disability or
grappling with a behavioral health condition they cannot fully focus on school until they receive
treatment
One approach to alleviating these issues is to increase the number of school-aged children who access
health care on a regular basis by bringing health care services directly to the children in a school-related
setting In these programs local health care providers bring services and linkages to other medical care
vision services behavioral counseling oral health care reproductive health nutrition education and
health promotion services at locations where the children are learning or playing
1 httpswwwcaanvorgwp-contentuploads2018102018-Nevada-Childrens-Report-Cardpdf
2 httpwwwchildhealthdataorgbrowsesurveyresultsq=5457ampr=30
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 3 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
Health care providers and school-related organizations working together in these programs share a
commitment to support the health well-being and academic success of children in their community
When health care and education systems are working together attendance improves conditions such as
asthma or diabetes are better managed and behavioral health issues get quicker attention The goal of
the partnership is to create a culture of health within the school and among its inhabitants enabling
children and adolescents to thrive in the classroom and beyond
School-related health care3 can also be a powerful tool for achieving health equity among children and
adolescents experiencing disparities in health outcomes due to race ethnicity or family income The
placement of needed services such as medical behavioral dental enabling4 and vision care directly in a
school-related setting allows all students to have opportunities to learn and grow
Effectively promoting health and wellness among school-aged children also requires engaging the entire
family Being active eating nutritious meals and maintaining a healthy lifestyle starts with the family
Having parents or caregivers who are living with their own untreated health conditions can make it
difficult for a child to have their health care needs addressed Prevention and treatment rely heavily on
the family which is why this RFA encourages projects to provide services to the whole family
While many health care providers play a role in the well-being of school-aged children this RFA focuses
on FQHCrsquos and FQHC Look-Alikes FQHCrsquos primarily serve the most vulnerable Nevadans more than two-
thirds of their patients are uninsured or on Medicaid and more than 95 percent live below 200 percent
of the Federal poverty level Because of this FQHCs qualify for enhanced reimbursement from Medicare
and Medicaid They must offer a sliding fee scale provide comprehensive services have an ongoing
quality assurance program and have a governing board of directors the majority of whom must be
patients of the FQHC
FQHCrsquos are also a valuable tool for the State to leverage federal funding to increase health care access
Compared to states with similar population size Nevada receives a small fraction of health center
program dollars
112 PHILOSOPHY
This RFA is being administered by the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services Office of Community Partnerships and Grants (DHHS-OCPG) a mission-driven grantor All proposals funded through this RFA must be aligned with the overall mission of the Department and the OCPG as referenced below
3 Nevada School-Based Health Center Toolkit -
httpdpbhnvgovuploadedFilesdpbhnvgovcontentProgramsAH-CompSBHC20Toolkit_Appendices20FINAL(1)pdf 4
Enabling Services Per Section 330(b)(1)(A)(iv) enabling services are non-clinical services that do not include direct patient services that enable individuals to access health care and improve health outcomes Enabling services include case management referrals translationinterpretation transportation eligibility assistance health education environmental health risk reduction health literacy and outreach
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 4 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
- The Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) promotes the health and well-being of
Nevadans through the delivery or facilitation of essential services to ensure families are
strengthened public health is protected and individuals achieve their highest level of self-
sufficiency
- The mission of the Office of Community Partnerships and Grants (OCPG) is to help families and
individuals in Nevada reach their highest level of self-sufficiency by supporting the community
agencies that serve them though engagement advocacy and resource development
To further the missions of the Department and the OCPG this RFA seeks partners whose proposals are focused on achieving positive outcomes The overarching objective is to improve the health and well-being of the children and families served while influencing positive change in Nevada communities
To reach this goal collaborations with school-related settings other health care providers (including behavioral health) andor community organizations are required to address the patients holistically A holistic approach recognizes the connection of health care to social services as equal partners in planning developing programs and monitoring patients to ensure their needs are met Social determinates include factors like socio-economic status education the physical environment and access to services
Underserved low-income and disparate populations are at a higher risk of developing health problems because of a greater exposure to health and social risks Access to services for this population is strained and requires innovative approaches on behalf of providers in order to address these issues Access barriers may include transportation limitations cultural and linguistic differences disabilities and many other factors that may impede patients from accessing services Agencies are encouraged to be creative to meet the needs of Nevadarsquos families especially those who are difficult to reach and weave the philosophy of a holistic-centered approach into their proposals
12 PROJECT REQUIREMENTS
121 VISION
Ensure every school-aged child in Nevada has an established medical home5
122 GOALS
This application addresses multiple goals as outlined below
- Increase the number of school-aged children in Medically Underserved Areas (MUArsquos) who have
medical homes
- Increase the number of school-aged children in MUArsquos who have one well-care visit per year
5 Patient Centered Medical Home - httpspcmhahrqgovpagedefining-pcmh
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 5 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
- Increase the utilization of preventive health care services including behavioral health services by
school-aged children and their families in MUArsquos
- Increase the number of school-aged children who are assessed and treated for behavioralmental
health disorders
- Ensure students in the projectrsquos service area know where to access affordable health care in their
area
123 TARGET POPULATION
The target population is school-aged children typically ages five through seventeen-years-old and their families from medically underserved areas (MUArsquos)
124 LOCATION
Health care services must be provided at a school-related setting in a designated medically underserved area (MUA) These services can be provided via an onsite clinic a mobile clinic a telehealth system or another method that is accessible at a school-related setting
125 ELIGIBLE ORGANIZATIONS
Existing federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) and FQHC Look-Alikes as defined by the Health
Resources amp Services Administration (HRSA) headquartered in Nevada can apply for this funding if
capable of meeting the goals of this RFA
126 AWARDED PROJECT ACTIVITIES
Projects awarded funds will
- Provide health care services to school-aged children and their families in medically underserved
areas
- Increase the number of school-aged children who are assessed and treated for behavioralmental
health disorders
- Emphasize prevention in the provision of health and behavioralmental health services
- Increase the number of school-aged patients served by the subrecipient
- Increase access to health care for Nevadans in medically underserved areas who are not currently
accessing services
- Partner with Nevada 2-1-1 to ensure students in the projectrsquos service area know where to find
nearby and affordable health care services
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 6 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
- Use best practices and evidence-based care when p roviding all services including those related
to physical behavioral and mental health
- Ensure health center services and materials are developmentally appropriate and respectful of
cultural an d linguistic diversity gender identity sexual orientation and disability
- Establish an d maintain f ormal agreements such as Memorandums of Understanding (MOU) with
at least one school-related setting as well as Nevada 2-1-1 and other community-based
resources that provide wrap-around services to patients with additional needs
127 SERVICE DELIVERY MODEL OPTIONS
Services can be delivered through an y of the following service delivery models
- School-based (on school grounds)
School-based health centers are located on school grounds and provide comprehensive medical andor behavioral health c are Ser vices may include physical exams screenings immunizations behavioralmental health care management of chronic conditions age-appropriate reproductive health care primary medical care for injuries and illness laboratory tests tuberculosis tests over-the-counter medications and prescription writing and referrals and coordination of outside services Clinicians delivering health care can include nurse practitioners physicians residents physician assistants behavioral h ealth specialists social workers dietitians nurses and medical assistants among others
- School-linked (off school grounds)
School-linked health services are located off school grounds in an area where the children are already congregating and provide the same services as school-based health centers With school-linked services the FQHC needs to have a formalized well-coordinated linkage to at least one school-related setting A school-related setting can be a school beforeafter school program multi-service teen center or something similar Students and families need to be able to easily access services at the site and school-related staff should know how to facilitate needed services through a close working relationship wi th the site
- Mobile c linics
Mobile clinics bring health care to schools andor school-linked sites using any version of vehicles often a specialized van fully equipped with exam rooms and needed medical equipment Mobile clinics can provide comprehensive medical care oral health care behavioral health care andor specialty care for conditions like asthma For this RFA mobile clinics must offer a minimum of primary health care and behavioral h ealth assessments with formalized processes andor agreements for needed referrals
- Telehealth services
Telehealth services connect school-related settings to health care providers utilizing secure and encrypted videoconferencing technology At the site a trained telehealth presenter serving the patient is generally connected to an off-site provider to assess an acute medical problem or
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 7 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
provide general primary care services The equipment can be connected to primary care providers behavioral health providers andor specialists who manage chronic diseases such as asthma or diabetes provide education on nutrition diabetes or weight loss andor provide behavioral health care In some systems parents can participate from the site or can access the visit through a personal video enab led device such as a smart phone or iPad
128 GRANT PERIOD Resulting award(s) are intended to span two State Fiscal Years ndash 2020 and 2021 This is a two-year award beginning on July 1 2019 and ending on June 30 2021 All awards ar e subject to funding availability and contingent on grantee performance over the two-year course of the grant
129 AVAILABLE FUNDING
The FQHC Incubator Project may award up to $1400000 ($700000 per year) from the Funds for a
Healthy Nevada for the FY2020-2021 biennium to eligible organizations Funding will be competitively
awarded to eligible applicants who obtain the highest scores by demonstrating projects that will best
meet the goals outlined in this RFA in a fiscally responsible manner
Funds will be awarded to up to three (3) subrecipients Depending on what is in the best interest of the
State awarded funds could be distributed b ased on a funding formula with 70 of funds allocated to
Clark County and 30 allocated to the rest of Nevada All funding is dependent on State and Legislative
approval
1210 PURPOSE OF FUNDING This g rant will serve as a one-time funding source to enhance a current FQHCFQHC Look-Alikersquos ability to serve school-aged children and their fa milies in a school-related setting The RFArsquos intent is to provide lsquoseed moneyrsquo for sustainability The DHHS will make the final d etermination of an applicantrsquos abilities and intent to comply with the required project expectations The one-time funding could assist an organization with securing a new location purchasing new equipment (such as telehealth carts) upgrading equ ipment andor securing new provider(s) to expand services not currently provided This i s a competitive process and subrecipient(s) who receive awards thr ough this RFA are not guaranteed future funding All costs incurred in responding to this RFA will be borne by the applicant(s) In the event no qualified applicants are identified f or this RFA the DHHS reserves the right to perform alternate measures to identify potential applicants
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 8 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
1211 FUNDING REQUIREMENTS
Funds from this RFA can generally be used in the following categories
- Equipment including telehealth equipment
- Mobile clinics
- Capital im provements and clinical renovations for medical dental and behavioral health services
- Rent for a new site serving school-aged children an d their families
- Outreach materials and costs related to educating students on where to access nearby
affordable health care services
- Salary Support including
o Eligible providers as defined in Chapter 2900 ndash Federally Qualified Health C enters (FQHC)
of the Division of Health Care Financing and Policy Medicaid Services Manual ( MSM)
o Clinical support staff (nurses medical assistants)
o Administrative support staff (front desk billing executive IT etc)
1212 REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
- Subrecipients must submit quarterly reports documenting progress towards g oals and tracking
basic unduplicated patient demographics
- Subrecipients must capture data for number of screenings for Tobacco Cessa tion and the number
of referrals made to the Tobacco Quit Line
- Subrecipients will also be required to track and report on a limited number of performance
indicators The subrecipient will propose performance indicators as part of their application
however final indicators will be decided by the OCPG during selection of awards Potential
indicators could in clude any of the following
o Number and percentage of unduplicated scho ol-aged patients who had a comprehensive
well-care exam during each grant year
o Number age and gender of unduplicated p atients seen each year
o Number and percentage of patients 13 years of age who had one dose of meningococcal
vaccine one Tdap vaccine and the complete human papillomavirus vaccine series by
their 13th birthday
o Number and percentage of school-aged patients who had a vision scr eening
o Number and percentage of school-aged patients who had their B ody mass index (BMI)
percentile documented counseled for nutrition andor counseled for physical activity
o Number and percentage of patients who received an influenza vaccination e ach year
o Number and percentage screened for substance abuse disorders
o Number and percentage of patients screened f or behavioral health d isorders
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 9 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
- Throughout this document the words ldquoapplicationrdquo and ldquoproposalrdquo may be used
interchangeably Both refer to the documents that applicants submit to request project funding
- The term ldquosubrecipientrdquo refers to an applicant who has been a warded funds through this RFA
- A school-related setting means any of the following school-based school-linked mobile vehicle
or telehealth services as defined in Section 127 in this RFA
- Medically Underserved Areas (MUArsquos) are those defined by the Health Res ources amp Service
Administration (HRSA)6
1213 USE OF TERMS
6 httpsbhwhrsagovshortage-designationmuap-process
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 10 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
APPLICATION PROCESS SEC TION II
21 APPLICATION QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Substantive questions about the application may be submitted to the DHHS via e -mail to
GMUdhhsnvgov through 3pm on Friday February 22 2019 In the subject line of the email write
ldquoFQHC Incubator Project - Questionrdquo Responses will be posted to the OCPG website
httpdhhsnvgovGrants by Friday March 1 2019 The Questions and Answers will remain on the
website through the end of the application period After February 22 2019 no substantive questions
about the a pplication will be answered
Technical q uestions about submitting the application may be directed to Jennifer White via e-mail at
jwhitedhhsnvgov throughout the application period Applicants are advised not to wait until the
deadline to ask questions The OCPG cannot guarantee immediate response and applications submitted
after the published deadline will be disqualified
22 EVALUATION AND AWARD PROCESS
Completed applications must be submitted via mail or in-person to the DHHS-DO by 3pm on Friday
March 15 2019 P roposals must be delivered to
Department of Health and Human Services Directorrsquos Office
Attn Cathy Council (FQHC RFA)
4126 Technology Way Suite 100
Carson Ci ty NV 89706
The proposal must include
- One (1) original marked ldquoMASTERrdquo
- Three (3) identical copies and
- One (1) CD or USB Flash Drive with an exact duplicate of the complete proposal (all electronic
files m ust be saved in ldquoPDFrdquo format)
Once th e application is submitted no corrections or adjustments may be made prior to the n egotiation
period Proposals received by the deadline will be reviewed as follows
a Technical R eview
OCPG staff will perform a technical review of each p roposal to ensure that minimum standards are met Proposals may be disqualified if they
o Are missing fundamental el ements (ie unanswered questions required attachments) o Do not meet the intent of the RFA or o Are submitted by an entity that is financially unstable as evidenced by information
gleaned from the submitted fiscal d ocuments
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 11 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
b Evaluation
Applications that meet minimum standards will be forwarded to a review team selected by the DHHS Re viewers will score each application using the Scoring Matrix in Appendix A of this document
In accordance with prevailing grant evaluation procedures discussion between a pplicants and reviewers will not be allowed during the review process Requests must stand on their own merit
c Final Decisions
After reviewing an d scoring the applications the OCPG will submit funding recommendations to
the DHHS Director who will make the final fu nding decisions Final decisions will be made by the
DHHS Director based on the following factors
o Scores on the scoring matrix
o Geographic distribution between Clark County and the rest of the state
o Conflicts or redundancy with other federal state or locally funded programs or
supplanting (substitution) of existing funding and
o Availability of funding
23 NOTIFCATION AND AWARD PROCESS Applicants will be notified of their status with a Letter of Intent after decisions have been made in April 2019
DHHS staff will conduct negotiations with the applicants regarding the recommendation for funding to
address any specific issues identified by the DHHS These issues may include but are not limited to
- Revisions to the project budget
- Revisions to the Scope of Work andor Performance Indicators andor
- Enactment of Special Conditions (eg certain fiscal controls more stringent performance
requirements or more frequent reviews etc)
Not all applicants who are contacted f or final n egotiations will necessarily receive an award Al l related issues must be resolved before a grant will be awarded All funding is contingent upon availability of funds
Upon succ essful conclusion of negotiations DHHS staff will complete a written g rant agreement in the form of a Notice of Subaward (NOSA) The NOSA an d any supporting documents will be distributed to the subrecipient upon approval of the Subaward
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 12 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
24 DISCLAIMER
DHHS reserves the right to accept or reject any or all applications This RFA does not obligate the State to award a contract or complete the project and the State reserves the right to cancel solicitation if it is in its best interest
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 13 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
25 RFA TIMELINE
Date Activity
January 28 2019 RFA is published
Deadline for applicants to submit substantive February 22 2019
questions about application to OCPG
OCPG posts Questions and Answers to OCPG March 1 2019
website
March 15 2019 Applications are due by 3 PM
March 18 ndash April 5 2019 Review Committee complete reviews
Review Committee Meeting- adopts final
April 2019 recommendations for submission to the
DHHS Director
DHHS Director reviews recommendations and April 2019
finalizes awards
OCPG staff finalizes budgets outcomes and Late April ndash June 30 2019
issues Notices of Grant Award
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 14 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
26 UPON APPROVAL OF AWARD
261 MONTHLY FINANCIAL STATUS AND REQUEST FO R FUNDS REPORTS
DHHS requires the use of a standardized Exc el spreadsheet reimbursement request form that self-
populates certain financial information This fo rm must be used for all reimbursement requests Monthly
reports are required even if no reimbursement is requested for a month Instructions and technical
assistance will be provided upon award of funds The monthly reports will be due by the 15th of the
following month
262 PERFORMANCE REPORTING
Applicants who receive an award must collaborate with the DHHS in reporting quarterly on progress in
meeting goals Additional performance reports may be requested as instructed by the DHHS Quarterly
progress reports will be due by the 15th of the month following the end of the reporting quarter
263 SUBRECIPIENT MONITORING
Successful applicants must participate in subrecipient monitoring Subrecipient monitoring is intended to
provide ongoing technical support to subrecipients and gather information reportable by DHHS to the
state oversight entities To facilitate the review process materials referred to in the review documents
should be gathered p rior to the review The subrecipientrsquos primary contact person an d appropriate staff
should make themselves available to answer questions and assist the reviewer(s) throughout the process
At least one (1) board member must also be available during the exit discussion The subrecipient
monitoring reports or action items will be sent to the subrecipient within 30 working days following the
conclusion of the monitoring
264 COMPLIANCE WITH CHANGES TO FEDERAL AND STATE LAWS
As federal and state laws change and affect either the DHHS process or the requirements of recipients
successful applicants will be required to respond to and adhere to all new regulations and requirements
265 NEVADA 2-1-1
All applicants highly encouraged to be listed in Nevada 2-1-1 at the time of application Onc e awarded
this becomes a requirement All successful ap plicants will be required to add or update their agencyrsquos profile on Nevadarsquos 2-1-1 website located at wwwnevada211org within 60 days after receiving
notification of award and provide verification of enrollment Nevada 2-1-1 is a statewide resource for
individuals looking for assistance services and programs
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 15 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
APPLICATION SECTION III
31 APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS
A Completed applications must be submitted via mail or in-person to the DHHS-DO no later than Friday March 15 2019 by 300 PM (Pacific Time) Proposals must be delivered to
Department of Health and Human Services Directorrsquos Office
Attn Cathy Council (F QHC RFA)
4126 Technology Way Suite 100
Carson Ci ty NV 89706
The proposal must include
o One (1) original marked ldquoMASTERrdquo o Three (3) identical copies and
o One (1) CD or USB Flash Drive with an exact duplicate of the complete proposal (all
electronic files must be saved in ldquoPDFrdquo format)
The DHHS-DO is not responsible for issues or delays in mail service Any applications received after the deadline may be disqualified from review Therefore the DHHS encourages organizations to use mail tracking and submit their applications well before the deadline
If you do not receive an acknowledgement of application receipt within 72 business hours please contact Jennifer White via e-mail at jwhitedhhsnvgov or via telephone at (775) 684-7591
B A complete application will require all items listed under the Application Checklist Use 11-point Arial
font with 10rdquo margins and convert all items into PDF document format Submissions must abide
by the maximum page l imitations and exceeding identified limits may be cause for disqualification
from review
C Do not submit unsolicited materials as part of your application Any unsolicited materials mailed delivered or e-mailed to the OCPG will not be accepted This includes support letters cover pages cover letters brochures newspaper clippings photographs media materials etc
D Complete the Application Checklist prior to submitting The Application Checklist is for the benefit of the applicants and is not required to be included in the submission packet
E Once the application is submitted no corrections or adjustments may be made prior to the negotiation period
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 16 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
32 APPLICATION
321 PROJECT SUMMARY
Provide a brief n arrative for each question b elow Number your responses to align with the order the
questions are posed Limit the Project Summary responses to no more than one (1) page
1 Grant title
2 Name of organization contact person and contact information
3 Brief project sum mary
4 Geographic service area of project
5 Name and address of school or school-related setting where project will be located
6 Amount of funding requested
322 AGENCY DESCRIPTION
Provide a brief n arrative for each question b elow Number your responses to align with the order the
questions are posed Limit the Agency Description responses to no more than two (2) pages If a
question does not apply put lsquoNArsquo
1 Brief history of organization including p rogram strengths and weaknesses
2 Brief descriptions of current programs and activities of the agency
3 Number of unduplicated patients currently and historically served
4 Number of unduplicated school-aged children currently and historically served
5 Geographic area currently served
6 Brief explanation of how organization is capable of effectively accomplishing RFA goals
7 Brief description of process used to solicit and incorporate input from schools school-related
settings other providers andor community members in project identification
323 NARRATIVE DESCRIPTION
Provide a narrative for each question below Number your responses to align with the order the
questions are posed Limit the Narrative Description responses to no more than fifteen (15) pages If a
question does not apply put lsquoNArdquo
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 17 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
3231 ORGANIZATION STRENGTH (10 points) 1 Describe organizationrsquos qualifications and experiences providing physical and
behavioral health services to the target population
2 Describe the roles experiences and tenure of key employees who will be running
the day-to-day operations of the project
3 Explain if applicant is a certified Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) If not
please describe status in becoming a PCMH
3232 COLLABORATIVE PARTNERSHIPS (15 points) 4 Describe the formal collaboration(s) with school-relating setting(s) Provide copies
of formal agreement(s) as attachments to proposal
5 Describe formal collaboration with Nevada 2-1-1 to educate students in the projectrsquos area on where to access affordable physical an d behavioral health care near them
Provide copy of formal agreement as an attachment to proposal
6 For services not provided by the applicant explain how the project will formally
coordinate and integrate services with other existing systems such as behavioral
health oral h ealth vision health an d educational settings Include specific
partnerships or collaborations and describe each agencyrsquos role Describe the
collaborationrsquos collective impact on the community in the project service area
3233 SERVICE DELIVERY (35 points) 7 Provide the following information on the service location
a Site address and name (ie name of school-related s etting)
b Expected operating hours and planned closures
c Explanation of the service delivery gap in that area including data used to
support these findings and
d Description how this project is expected to address that service delivery gap
8 Explain what services will be provided under this project Differentiate between
current services and new services
9 Explain how the project will use a holistic approach to address patientsrsquo physical and
behavioral health n eeds
10 Describe how the project will increase the utilization of preventative health care
services
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 18 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
11 Explain how the project will incorporate the assessment and treatment of
behavioralmental health disorders into the provision of services
12 Explain how the project will utilize developmentally ap propriate and evidence-based
standards of care when p roviding serv ices
13 Explain how the project will promote family wellness by engaging parents guardians
in managing b oth their childrsquos and their own well-being
14 Address perceived barriers to implementation of the proposed project and identify
ways barriers to success will be mitigated
15 Submit a Scope of Work under Appendix C that includes goals and implementation
timeline with key dates activities and deliverables as an attachment to the proposal
(excluded from the the Narrative page maximum)
3234 COST-EFFECTIVENESS (20 points in conjunction with Budget)
16 Explain the amount of funding n eeded and how awarded funds would be utilized
Include ratio of funds requested per number of proposed new patients
17 Describe plans and ability to leverage other funding sources for this project
18 Describe plan for project sustainability after this funding ends Explain the vision for
the project five years after this funding is initially awarded
19 If applying for salary support provide the following information where applicable
a Current staffing plan and the proposed staffing plan
b Proposed salary support being requested and how it will h elp organization
meet the RFA goals and
c Plan demonstrating how the additional staff will be sustained after grant
funding ends
20 If applying for capital i mprovement or renovation c osts provide the following
information where applicable
a Description of renovations or capital improvement to the new site
b Explanation h ow these expenses will help organization meet the RFA goals
c Identification of the site address and current and proposed hours of operation
d Construction estimate and floor plans (submit as an attachment)
e Description of other funding so urces to ensure completion if capital
improvements exceed requested amount and
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 19 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
f Statement whether the location is leased or owned if leased a copy must be
provided as an attachment
21 If applying for equipment mobile clinic or other similar purchases provide the
following information where applicable
a Description of item(s) being purchased and purpose
b Explanation h ow items will help organization m eet the RFA goals
c Costs and
d Description of other funding so urces if costs exceed requested amount
22 Describe costs for educating students on where to find affordable and nearby health
care services
3235 PERFORMANCE I NDICATORS (20 points)
23 For each p roject year provide goals for the following
a Number of new unduplicated patients
b Number of current patients who will get new services
c Number of well-care visits and
d Ratio of provider(s) to patients
24 Propose four SMART (Specific Measurable Achievable Relevant and Time-Bound)
performance indicators to be tracked and explain how those measures will
sufficiently demonstrate the impact of the project
25 Describe quality assurance plan for monitoring and evaluating the appropriateness
effectiveness accessibility and success of services funded u nder this grant Describe
benchmarks for success and how they will be tracked and reported
26 If agency has previously received funding from the DHHSrsquos FQHC Incubator Grant
Program describe performance and barriers in accomplishing those program goals If
this is not applicable then describe performance and barriers in accomplishing
program goals funded under another most recent state or local grant program
324 BPHC ATTACHMENTS
To ensure that this project is sustainable and achieves its goals the following documents must be
completed for the proposed project site Fo llow the instructions in the most recent New Access Point
(NAP) or Service Area Competition (SAC) Funding Opportunity Announcement released by the Health
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 20 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
Resources amp Services Administration Bureau of Primary Health Care (BPHC)7
1 Attachment 1 Service Area Map and Table
2 Form 4 Community Characteristics
325 BUDGET INSTRUCTIONS (20 points in conjunction with cost-effectiveness section)
All proposals must include a detailed project budget for each year of the grant The b udget should be
an accurate representation of the fu nds actually needed to carry out the p roposed Scope of Work and
achieve the p rojected outcomes over the b iennium If the p roject is not fully funded the OCPG w ill
work with the a pplicant to modify the b udget the S cope of Work and the p rojected outcomes
Applicants must use the budget template form (Excel spreadsheet) provided in this RFA Use the budget
definitions provided in the ldquoCategorized Budgetsrdquo section b elow to complete the narrative budget
(spreadsheet tab lab eled Budget Narrative 1) This spreadsheet contains formulas to automatically
calculate totals and links to the budget summary spreadsheet (tab labeled Budget Summary) to
automatically complete budget totals in Column B Do not override formulas
The column for extensions (unit cost quantity total) on the budget narrative should include only funds
requested in this application Budget items funded through other sources may be included in the budget
narrative description but not in the extension column Ensure th at all figures add up correctly and that
totals match within and between all forms and sections
Categorized Budgets
Personnel Employees who provide direct services are identified here The following criterion is useful in distinguishing employees from contract staff
CONTRACTOR EMPLOYEE
Delivers product The applicant organization is responsible for product
Furnishes tools andor equipment The applicant organization furnishes work space amp tools
Determines means and methods The applicant organization determines means and methods
In the narrative section list each position and provide a breakdown of the wages or salary and the fringe benefit rate (eg health insurance FICA workerrsquos compensation) For example
Program Director ndash ($28hour x 2080year + 22 fringe) x 25 of time = $17763 Intake Specialist ndash ($20hour x 40 hoursweek + 15 fringe) x 52 weeks = $47840
Only those staff whose time can be traced directly back to the grant project should be included in this budget category This includes those who spend only part of their time on grant activities All others should be considered part of the applicantrsquos indirect costs (explained later)
7 httpsbphchrsagovprogramopportunitiesfundingopportunitiesSACindexhtml
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 21 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
Staff TravelPer Diem Travel costs must provide direct benefit to this project Identify staff that will travel the purpose frequency and projected costs US General Services Administration (GSA) rates for per diem and lodging and the state rate for mileage (currently 535 cents) should be used unless the organizations policies specify lower rates for these expenses Local travel (ie within the programrsquos service area) should be listed separately from out-of-area travel Out-of-state travel and nonstandard faresrates require special justification GSA rates can be found online at httpswwwgsagovportalcategory26429 Operating
Supplies List and justify tangible and expendable property such as office supplies program supplies etc that are purchased specifically for this project As a general rule supplies do not need to be priced individually but a list of typical program supplies is necessary If food is to be purchased detail must be provided that explains how the food will be utilized to meet the project goals Uses that are not in compliance with the Grant Instructions and Requirements will be denied
Occupancy Identify and justify any facility costs specifically associated with the project such as rent insurance as well as utilities such as power and water If an applicant administers multiple projects that occupy the same facility only the appropriate share of costs associated with this grant project should be requested in this budget
Communications Identify justify and cost-allocate any communication expenses associated with the project such as telephone services internet services cell phones fax lines etc
Public Information Identify and justify any costs for brochures project promotion media buys etc
Equipment List equipment to purchase or lease costing $1000 or more and justify these expenditures Also list any computer hardware to be purchased regardless of cost All other equipment costing less than $1000 should be listed under Supplies Equipment that does not directly facilitate the purpose of the project as an integral component is not allowed Equipment purchased for this project must be labeled inventoried and tracked as such ContractualConsultant Services Project workers who are not employees of the applicant organization should be identified here Any costs associated with these workers such as travel or per diem should also be identified here Explain the need andor purpose for the contractualconsultant service Identify and justify these costs For collaborative projects involving multiple sites and partners separate from the applicant organization all costs incurred by the separate partners should be included in this category with subcategories for Personnel Fringe Contract etc Written sub-agreements must be maintained with each partner and the applicant is responsible for administering these sub-agreements in accordance with all requirements identified for grants administered under the OCPG A copy of written agreements with any and all partners must be provided Scan these documents along with the budget into one file to attach to the application Other Expenses Identify and justify these expenditures which can include virtually any relevant expenditure associated with
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 22 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
the project such as audit costs car insurance client transportation etc Sub-awards mini-grants stipends or scholarships that are a component of a larger project or program may be included here but require special justification as to the merits of the applicant serving as a ldquopass-throughrdquo entity and its capacity to do so If there is insufficient room in the narrative section to provide adequate justification please add a third tab to the budget template for that purpose Indirect Costs Indirect costs represent the expenses of doing business that are not readily identified with or allocable to a specific grant contract project function or activity but are necessary for the general operation of the organization and the conduct of activities it performs Indirect costs include but are not limited to depreciation and use allowances facility operation and maintenance memberships and general administrative expenses such as managementadministration accounting payroll legal and data processing expenses that cannot be traced directly back to the grant project Identify these costs in the narrative section but do not enter any dollar values The form contains a formula that will automatically calculate the indirect expense at 8 of the total direct costs Indirect costs may not exceed 8 of the total funds being requested however if you wish to request less than 8 you may override the formula (located in Cell C-125)
Budget Summary Form 2 After completing Budget Narrative Form 1 turn to Budget Summary Form 2 Column B of Form 2 (ldquoOCPGrdquo) should automatically update with the category totals from Budget Narrative Form 1 Column B should reflect only the amount requested in this application Complete Columns C through I of the form for all other funding sources that are either secured or pending for this project (not for the organization as a whole) Use a separate column for each separate source including in-kind volunteer or cash donations Replace the words ldquoOther Fundingrdquo in the cell(s) in Row 6 with the name of the funding source Enter either ldquoSecuredrdquo or ldquoPendingrdquo in the cell(s) in Row 7 If the funding is pending note the estimated date of the funding decision in Section B below the table along with any other explanation deemed important to include Enter the ldquoTotal Agency Budgetrdquo in Cell J-23 labeled for this purpose This should include all funding available to the agency for all projects including the proposed project Cell J-27 directly below labeled ldquoPercent of Total Budgetrdquo will automatically calculate the percentage that the funding requested from the OCPG for the proposed project will represent Complete Column I of the form if any program income is anticipated through this project In Section C below the table provide an explanation of how that income is calculated
Additional Resources (In-Kind Volunteer or Cash Donations) Additional resources are not required as a condition of these grants but will be a factor in the scoring Such resources might include in-kind contributions volunteer services or cash contributions In-kind items must be non-depreciated or new assets with an established monetary value Definition of In-Kind Any property or services provided without charge by a third party to a second party are In-Kind contributions First Party Funding Source administered by the OCPG
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 23 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
Program Income
Second Party The subrecipient (and any sub-subrecipient of project supported by the grant) Third Party Everyone else
If the subrecipient (second party) provides the property or services then it is considered ldquocashrdquo contributions since only third parties can provide ldquoIn-Kindrdquo contributions
When costing out volunteer time remember to calculate the cost based on the duties performed not the volunteerrsquos qualifications For example an attorney may donate hisher time to drive clients a certain number of hours per month but the donation must be calculated on the normal and expected pay received by drivers not attorneys
Program income means gross income earned by the recipient that is directly generated by a supported activity or earned as a result of the grant award For programs receiving federal funds program income shall be added to funds committed to the project and used to further eligible project or program objectives A program may charge reasonable feessubsidiescosts to be paid by recipients of services Any estimated cash income generated in such a way must be identified and reported on Budget Summary Form in Column I ndash ldquoProgram Incomerdquo
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 24 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
326 REQUIREMENTS OF COMPLIANCE
Applicant agrees to the following requirements of compliance with submission of an application
1) Applicant must be a Nevada Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) or FQHC Look-Alike If
currently debarred suspended or otherwise excluded or ineligible for participation in federal or
state assistance programs the applicant is ineligible to apply for funds
2) Applicants are highly encouraged to be listed in Nevada 2-1-1 at the time of application Once
awarded this becomes a requirement
3) Applicants are highly encouraged to utilize the Nevada Childrenrsquos Medical Home Portal8 as a
resource for their patients with special health care needs
4) If the applicant has not met performance measures of previous DHHS contracts DHHS reserves
the right to not award additional contracts
5) All subrecipients must provide all required primary preventive behavioral enabling and other
health services as appropriate and necessary either directly or through established written
arrangements and referrals
6) Subrecipients must provide all required reports as outlined in this RFA
7) Funds are awarded for the purposes specifically defined in this document and shall not be used
for any other purpose
8) Applicants awarded funds shall leverage FQHC Incubator Project funds with other resources if the
actual cost of the deliverable exceeds the allowable and contracted amount
9) DHHS may conduct on-site subrecipient reviews annually or as deemed necessary
10) DHHS reserves the right during the contract period to renegotiate or change deliverables to expand services or reduce funding when deliverables are not satisfactorily attained
11) The applicant its employees and agents must comply with all Federal State and local statutes regulations codes ordinances certifications andor licensures applicable to an operational organization as defined under Eligible Organizations
8 httpsnvmedicalhomeportalorg
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 25 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
APPLICATION CHECKLIST
Application
Project Summary (1-page maximum with answers in order)
Agency Description (2-page maximum with answers in order)
Narrative Description (15 page maximum with answers in order)
Appendix C - Scope of Work
Budget using the provided excel form
o Year-One and Year-Two Budgets that include
Numbers are whole dollar amounts or zeros for each category
Budget is mathematically c orrect
Budget Summary and Budget Narrative match
Attachments
Attachment 1 ndash BPHC Attachment 1 Service Area Map and Table
Attachment 2 ndash BPHC Form 4 Community Characteristics
Attachment 3 - Formal agreements with school-related setting(s)
Attachment 4 - Formal agreement with Nevada 2-1-1 (if applicable)
Attachment 5 - Formal agreements with community providers andor other related agencies (if
applicable)
Attachment 6 - Agency staff organization chart and resumes of key personnel
Attachment 7 ndash Documentation of any conditions on your BPHC grant(s) for the past three (3)
fiscal years and specify the status of those findings
Attachment 8 - Most recent Single Audit and Management Letter or most recent year-end
financial statements (if federal audit is not applicable)
Attachment 9 - Proof of agency liability insurance
Attachment 10 - Proof of workersrsquo compensation insurance
Standard DHHS Grant Documents Signed
Appendix D - Certification by Authorized Official
Attachment A ndash Grant Conditions and Assurances
Attachment E ndash Audit Information Request
Attachment F ndash Current or Former State Employee Disclaimer
Attachment G ndash Confidentiality Addendum
Application S ubmission
Page l imits have not been exceeded
Arial 11-point font and one-inch margins have been retained
Completed application is received by the D HHS-DO via mail or in-person delivery no later than
March 15 2019 by 3pm
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 26 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
4 COST-EFFECTIVENESS AND LEVERAGING OF FUNDS ( Up to 20 Points)
APPENDIX A SCORING MATRIX 1 ORGANIZATION STRENGTH (Up to 10 Points)
Elements to be evaluated (1) Qualifications amp experience providing services to target population (2) Qualifications experiences of staff providing proposed service (3) Patient-Centered Medical Home status
0 elements addressed satisfactorily ndash Score 0 points
1 or 2 elements satisfactory others unsatisfactory ndash Score between 1 and 3 points
1 or 2 elements strong others satisfactory OR all 3 elements satisfactory ndash Score between 4 and 7 points
All 3 elements strong ndash Score between 8 and 10 points
2 COLLABORATIVE PARTNERSHIPS (Up to 15 Points) Elements to be evaluated (1) Strength of collaboration with school-related setting(s) including formalized agreement(s) (2) Strength of collaborations with internal and external community resources including having formal agreements in place (3) Collaborationrsquos potential collective impact on community in service area
0 elements addressed satisfactorily ndash Score 0 points
1 or 2 elements satisfactory others unsatisfactory ndash Score between 1 and 5 points
1 or 2 elements strong others satisfactory OR all 3 elements satisfactory ndash Score between 6 and 10 points
All 3 elements strong ndash Score between 11 and 15 points
3 SERVICE DELIVERY (Up to 35 Points) Elements to be evaluated (1) Service delivery model (location in an underserved area types of services to be offered holistic approach to addressing patientsrsquo needs emphasis on prevention) (2) Evidence-based and developmentally appropriate services (3) Behavioralmental health service delivery integration (4) Promotion of family wellness
0 elements addressed satisfactorily ndash Score 0 points
1 or 2 elements satisfactory others unsatisfactory ndash Score between 1 and 9 points
2 or 3 elements strong others unsatisfactory ndash Score between 9 and 18 points
2 or 3 elements strong others satisfactory OR all 4 elements satisfactory ndash Score between 19 and 28 points
All 4 elements strong ndash Score between 29 and 35 points
Elements to be evaluated (1) Overall cost-effectiveness of project (2) Appropriate use of funds based on RFA objectives amp requirements (3) Use of other resources (4) Ratio of funds requested per number of proposed new patients (5) Sustainability plans
0 elements addressed satisfactorily ndash Score 0 points
1 or 2 elements satisfactory others unsatisfactory ndash Score between 1 and 4 points
2 or 3 elements strong others unsatisfactory ndash Score between 5 and 8 points
2 or 3 elements strong others satisfactory ndash Score between 9 and 12 points
3 or 4 elements strong others satisfactory OR all 5 elements satisfactory ndash Score between 13 and 16 points
All 5 elements strong ndash Score between 17 and 20 points
5 PERFORMANCE INDICATORS AND O UTCOMES (Up to 20 Points) Elements to be evaluated (1) Number of new unduplicated patients and number of well-care visits to be completed (2) Ratio of provider(s) to patients (3) Proposed outcomes are SMART and accurately demonstrate project impact (4) Quality assurance plan (5) Past performance in meeting goals audits and findings
0 elements addressed satisfactorily ndash Score 0 points
1 or 2 elements satisfactory others unsatisfactory ndash Score between 1 and 4 points
2 or 3 elements strong others unsatisfactory ndash Score between 5 and 8 points
2 or 3 elements strong others satisfactory ndash Score between 9 and 12 points
3 or 4 elements strong others satisfactory OR all 5 elements satisfactory ndash Score between 13 and 16 points
All 5 elements strong ndash Score between 17 and 20 points
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 27 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
APPENDIX B OCPG - GRANT PROCEDURES COMPLAINTS FR OM APPLICANTS NOT SELECTED
The Office of Community Partnership and Grants (OCPG) is responsible for the development release review and accountability of Grants Due to various Grant funding sources there are various regulation and authorities in which OCPG must abide by both federal and state
The OCPG is required to abide by the Nevada State Administrative Manual (SAM) and stay apprised on any revisions Section 3000 ndash Federal Grant Procedures outlines additional information related to Grants including the related Nevada Revised Statutes (NRS) related to compliance Section 3020 ndash Grant Awards specifically identifies the guidelines in which OCPG may award grants Below is cited from Section 3020 of the SAM
The procedures must include 1 Written guidelines which help applicants determine whether and how to apply for the grant 2 A method to publicize grant opportunities 3 A structured applicant review process using pre-established criteria and a scoring system (Note a scoring
system is not required if the grant specifies the entity who shall receive the funds and how the funds will be allocated)
4 A procedure for dealing with complaints from applicants who were not selected for award These complaints should be investigated by someone of authority
5 A written grant agreement to be used upon issuing the award 6 Guidelines that address conflicts of interest 7 Procedures for reporting fraud and waste
Section 3020 for the SAM further states
Agencies must have a procedure for responding to complaints from applicants who were not selected for award At a minimum these complaints should be investigated by someone of authority The results of the investigation must be documented
In accordance with the SAM manual requiring a procedure to deal with complaints from Applicants who were not selected for award the OCPG has developed and utilizes the following procedure for addressing complaints
If an Applicant was not selected they may request a meeting either in writing or verbally within ten (10) business days of receipt of the notice to gmudhhsnvgov A follow up email will be sent within five (5) business days to schedule a meeting that is convenient to all involved parties The following information will be shared and may be provided in writing upon request
Review of the scores utilizing the pre-established scoring outlined in the grant application
Strengths and weaknesses of the application based on the outlined goals andor objectives of the grant
The Applicant may choose to include outside parties not affiliated to their agency to participate in the meeting
If the Applicant is not satisfied with the results of the Strengths and Weaknesses meeting they may request in writing an additional review within three (3) business days of the meeting to gmudhhsnvgov and it will be reviewed within five (5) business days with a written response This will be conducted by the Director of DHHS or designee not included in the selection and has authority to overturn a decision made
The OCPG will provide any additional suggestions for other opportunities if available as well as provide any known resources to assist the applicant in pursuing their goals as outlined in the applications
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 28 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
APPENDIX C SCOPE OF WORK
Description of Services Scope of Work and Deliverables
Provide a brief summary of the project or its intent here This section should be written in complete sentences
Scope of Work
Goal 1 Describe the primary goal the program wishes to accomplish with this subaward
Objective Activities Due Date Documentation Needed
1
2 Add more lines if necessary
1
2
XXXXXX
XXXXXX
1
2
Goal 2 Describe the most important secondary goal the program wishes to accomplish with this subaward
Objective Activities Due Date Documentation Needed
1 1 XXXXXX 1
Note to preparer Add lines to the table as applicable to accomplish all the goals Line up activities due dates and documentation as best as possible
For each goalobjective include implementation activities and due dates There may be more than one Activity and Due Date per objective
Applicants can copy and paste more tables if there are additional goals
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 29 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21
____________________________________ ______________________________
____________________________________ ______________________________
___________________________________ ______________________________
APPENDIX D CERTIFICATION BY AUTHORIZED OFFICIAL
As the authorized official for the applying agency I certify that the proposed project and activities
described in this application meets all requirements detailed within legislation governing the grant as
indicated by DHHS and the certifications in the Application Instructions that all the information
contained in the application is correct that the appropriate coordination with affected agencies and
organizations including subcontractors took place that this agency agrees to comply with all provisions
of the applicable grant program and all other applicable federal and state laws current or future rules
and regulations I understand and agree that any award received as a result of this application is subject
to the conditions set forth in the Notice of Subaward and accompanying documents
Name (typeprint) Phone
Title Email
Signature Date
Nevada Dept of Health and Human Services Page 30 of 30 RFA - FQHC Incubator Project FY20amp21